Pubdate: Wed, 22 Aug 2007 Source: Times-Standard (Eureka, CA) Copyright: 2007 MediaNews Group, Inc. Contact: http://www.times-standard.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/1051 Author: Godfrey Tudor-Matthews LEGALIZE POT LIKE TOBACCO There is little doubt that any discussion about cannabis can produce more heat than light. That said, it also appears that the greatest beneficiaries of current attitudes are the law and drug enforcement agencies. They are the ones who gain hugely from marijuana's proscription while the public-at-large loses. All the arguments against the use of marijuana can be applied to tobacco and alcohol: Addictive, detrimental to lung tissue, cerebrally impairing. Notwithstanding these arguments, there appears little evidence that cannabis is more deleterious to the body than either other substance; rather the reverse. Alcohol and tobacco seem to be more addictive, and certainly an excess of alcohol is likely to be more dangerous to a person behind the wheel of a car than marijuana. Proscription of any substance opens the door to crime; demand immediately raises prices. Did we learn nothing from the prohibition of the use of alcohol between 1920 and 1933? Those 13 years spawned the most powerful organized crime enterprises in the history of this country, according to an Internet site called Da Mob. It was only when Prohibition was repealed and alcohol taxed that the crime wave subsided. We should legalize marijuana like tobacco; trade cannabis on the Commodities Exchange, and put a tax on its use. This would save communities million of dollars spent in eradication by law enforcement personnel, freeing them to pursue other more deadly types of drugs peddled by foreign cartels and, at the same time, bring in much greatly needed tax revenue. Godfrey Tudor-Matthews Eureka - --- MAP posted-by: Richard Lake